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Beyond the Cold War - Lyndon Johnson and the New Global Challenges of the 1960s (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R3,802
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Beyond the Cold War - Lyndon Johnson and the New Global Challenges of the 1960s (Hardcover, New)
Series: Reinterpreting History: How Historical Assessments Change over Time
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In writing about international affairs in the 1960s, historians
have naturally focused on the Cold War. The decade featured
perilous confrontations between the United States and the Soviet
Union over Berlin and Cuba, the massive buildup of nuclear
stockpiles, the escalation of war in Vietnam, and bitter East-West
rivalry throughout the developing world. Only in recent years have
scholars begun to realize that there is another history of
international affairs in the 1960s. As the world historical force
of globalization has quickened and deepened, historians have begun
to see that many of the global challenges that we face today -
inequality, terrorism, demographic instability, energy dependence,
epidemic disease, massive increases in trade and monetary flows, to
name just a few examples - asserted themselves powerfully during
the decade. The administration of President Lyndon B. Johnson
confronted tectonic shifts in the international environment and
perhaps even the beginning of the post-Cold War world. While the
ideologically infused struggle between the United States and the
Soviet Union was indisputably crucial, new forces and new actors
altered international relations in profound and lasting ways. This
book asks how the Johnson administration responded to this changing
landscape. To what extent did U.S. leaders understand the changes
that we can now see clearly with the benefit of hindsight? How did
they prioritize these issues alongside the geostrategic concerns
that dominated their daily agendas and the headlines of the day?
How successfully did Americans grapple with these long-range
problems, with what implications for the future? What lessons lie
in the efforts of Johnson and his aides to cope with a new and
inchoate agenda of problems? This book reconsiders the 1960s and
suggests a new research agenda predicated on the idea that the Cold
War was not the only - or perhaps even the most important - feature
of international life in the period after World War II.
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